- Advertisement -
World

Crypto firms off to rocky start in 2023 with outflows, layoffs and a lawsuit

The fallout from the collapse of crypto exchange FTX and criminal charges leveled against its founder Sam Bankman-Fried weighed heavily on the sector.

Reuters
3 minute read
Share
A man wears a t-shirt with the logo of Bitcoin at the Magistrate Court building in Nassau, Bahamas Dec 19, 2022. Photo: Reuters
A man wears a t-shirt with the logo of Bitcoin at the Magistrate Court building in Nassau, Bahamas Dec 19, 2022. Photo: Reuters

The crypto industry's woes continued on Thursday as plunging deposits, layoffs and a lawsuit added to the tumult of 2022, which was dominated by sinking prices and high-profile bankruptcies.

The fallout from the collapse of crypto exchange FTX and criminal charges leveled against its founder Sam Bankman-Fried weighed heavily on the sector this week. Among those hit were Genesis Global Capital, which laid off staff, and crypto-focused Silvergate Bank, which reported a large fall in deposits.

Bankman-Fried on Tuesday pleaded not guilty to eight criminal counts including wire fraud and money laundering conspiracy. The 30-year-old is accused of looting FTX customers' deposits to support his Alameda Research hedge fund, buy real estate and donate millions of dollars to political causes.

Another crypto entrepreneur, Alex Mashinsky, the founder and former CEO of Celsius Network, also encountered a legal battle on Thursday. A new lawsuit filed by New York's attorney general alleges Mashinsky defrauded investors by concealing the failing health of his now-bankrupt cryptocurrency lending platform.

While Mashinsky was CEO between 2021 and 2022, Celsius made roughly a billion dollars in loans to Alameda Research, according to the lawsuit.

The civil lawsuit seeks to ban Mashinsky from doing business in New York and have him pay damages for violating state laws.

“It serves as a shot across the bow to other founders of entities like this," said Todd Phillips, founder of Phillips Policy Consulting LLC.

Meanwhile, Silvergate Capital Corp reported a sharp drop in fourth-quarter crypto-related deposits on Thursday as investors spooked by the FTX collapse pulled out more than US$8 billion (about RM35.2 billion), sending shares of the bank down more than 43%.

A US attorney told a bankruptcy court on Wednesday that prosecutors had seized US bank accounts at Silvergate and Farmington State Bank affiliated with FTX's Bahamas-based business, known as FTX Digital Markets.

The accounts at Silvergate Bank and Farmington State Bank, which does business as Moonstone Bank, held about US$143 million, court records showed.

Silvergate also said it would cut its workforce by 40%, or about 200 employees, to rein in costs as the industry downturn deepened. Genesis also plans to slash 30% of its workforce in a second round of layoffs in less than six months, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Genesis, which brokers digital assets for financial institutions like hedge funds and asset managers, announced in November its crypto lending arm would stop making new loans and blocked customers from withdrawing funds, citing market turmoil caused by the failure of FTX.

The layoffs were first reported by the Wall Street Journal, which also said Genesis is considering filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The firm is working with investment bank Moelis & Co to evaluate its options, the report said, citing people familiar with the matter.

Crypto exchange Gemini, which had a crypto lending product in partnership with Genesis, and other Genesis creditors have been agitating for a solution to avoid a situation similar to FTX’s rapid descent into bankruptcy.

Cameron Winklevoss, who founded Gemini with his twin brother, on Monday accused Barry Silbert, the CEO of Genesis' parent company Digital Currency Group, of "bad faith stall tactics" and asked him to commit to resolving US$900 million worth of disputed customer assets by Jan 8.